Part of the roof was standing when Captain Grose visited it in the end of last century.
Fig. 1327.—Alloway Kirk. View from North-East.
OLD DAILLY CHURCH, Ayrshire.
A ruin situated in the vale of the Girvan Water, about three miles east from Girvan. It stands in the centre of a spacious churchyard, planted with noble trees. Within its walls rest the remains of several of the Martyrs of the Covenant. The church was anciently called Dalmakervan, and was dedicated to St. Michael. It was granted by Duncan, first Earl of Carrick, to the monks of Paisley, and confirmed to them by Alexander II. in 1236. It was afterwards transferred to the monks of Crosraguel, and the name was changed to Dailly, possibly from the site of the church having been changed.
The structure (Fig. [1328]) is very long and narrow, being 92 feet in length and 26 feet wide over the walls. There is a gable wall at each end, and each gable is crowned with a belfry (Fig. [1329]). It is difficult to account for the presence of the two belfries. That on the east gable is the more
Fig. 1328.—Old Dailly Church. Plan.
ornamental of the two, but its ornament is obscured by ivy. The western belfry is plain and rather ruinous. The walls contain no doorways, and